Financial History Issue 133 (Spring 2020) | Page 35

slow fade that crude followed over the next few years. Rather, it was the too-close rela- tionship the banks had with their borrow- ers, who in turn, had too much dependence on one global commodity. As crude prices went down, banks doubled down. At first that seemed both wise and pru- dent. One shrewd Wall Street adage is sell into strength and buy into weakness. That works well through normal fluctuations, but not in structural declines. “As oil prices continued to weaken, southwestern banks sought new investment opportunities and therefore increased their lending to the then-booming real estate markets, particularly commercial real estate,” according to the FDIC history. “In hindsight this strategy proved to be unwise, for the health of the real estate markets was tied to the hitherto-strong energy markets.” As often is the case, there were early warning signs. Records show that from 1981 through 1983 office vacancy rates across the region were rising even while commercial real estate construction expenditures remained high. Then in 1986 crude prices tipped over from a slow fade to a steep drop. That pulled the rug out from under the entire economy of the region. A classic oil bust. In the FDIC’s assessment, “compound- ing the difficulties caused by the weak- ening energy markets was the excessive emphasis that some banks had placed on making energy loans to maintain market share in an environment in which the competition to keep oil and gas custom- ers, during 1981 and 1982, was intense.” The FDIC cited one specific case in which officials of Republic Bank of Texas were under pressure from members of the board of directors to preserve the bank’s market share in energy lending. “It was reported that Chairman James D. Berry summoned the bank’s top energy lenders to his office and told them he wanted to make more energy loans. The lenders, who knew the industry was gripped by a gold-rush psychology, ‘all sat there and blinked at the chairman, like a bunch of owls in a tree.’ But lenders at other institutions were assuming the price of oil would climb to $60 a barrel or more and had lowered their lending standards to grab new business. Republic’s custom- ers were going to those other banks.” There are many such examples ranging from ingenuous optimism, to cynical cal- culus, to oblivious bumbling. There were also a few Cassandras. In late 1985, Sandra Flannigan, a vice president at Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis Inc. in Houston, believed that, “If we see oil prices go below [$20 a barrel] and remain there for an extended period, we’ll have substantial problems.” Flanni- gan also anticipated that a serious decline in crude prices would have a knock-on effect across the entire state economy, especially real estate. Texas and Not to put too fine a point on it, but that included losses of nearly $6.3 billion in 1988 and $5.1 billion in 1989, respectively 91% and 82% of the total FDIC failure- resolution costs for those two years. For the three years 1987 through 1989, 71% of the banks that failed in the United States were southwestern: 491 out of 689. That flood of failure was not just broad, it was deep. It included some noteworthy and notorious busts. The rogues’ gallery comprised First City Bancorporation, First RepublicBank Corporation and MCorp holding companies, among others. In its official history and analysis of the period, the FDIC wrote, “The pervasive- ness of the problems facing the region’s depository institutions is indicated by the fact that the biggest savings and loan debacle also occurred in the Southwest, with Texas alone accounting for 18% of the Resolution Trust Corporation’s reso- lutions and 29.2% of its resolution costs.” While the carnage was worst within Texas, the knock-on effects spread across the country. It may be said, unkindly if not untruthfully, that the Texas and south- western banking crises of the mid-1980s were boomerang justice. The regional oil companies tried to play global trends to their advantage, aide—even exhorted—by the regional banks. The generous way to think of it would be that they believed their own hype. The harsher expression would be that they played with fire and got burned. As with any global commodity market, crude oil prices are subject to myriad influences both statistical and sentimental. The ground was set for the southwestern banking crises of the ’80s by the oil embar- gos of the early ’70s. In retaliation for the support from the United States and a few other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War, October 1973, several major Arab oil-exporting countries halted oil exports. While the ces- sation itself only lasted five months, until March 1974, its long-term effects funda- mentally changed the structure of the US economy and the global oil industry. The immediate effect was a rapid return to domestic development that had waned after World War II. In fits and starts, booms and busts, that domestic develop- ment continues to this day. Crude prices peaked in 1981, but no one could call the top, at least at the time. The trouble for banks, however, was not the Founded as Hogtown in 1875, Desdemona boomed from 300 denizens in 1904 to about 16,000 in 1919, the peak of its oil production. Corruption killed the industry; flood and fire destroyed most of the settlement. www.MoAF.org  |  Spring 2020  |  FINANCIAL HISTORY  33